Posted by 98greenc5 on 8/31/2011 2:05:00 PM (view original):
There are ways to bid big amounts on multiple guys to get a feel for things, but it takes a little work
1) Make a big offer
2) Wait a cycle to see if that is good for #1 offer. Make note of results
3) Withdraw offer and return to step 1 for next FA
In half a day you migh glean some information. This isn't perfect of course, but it is hardly "blindly" picking a FA to bid on
A modified approach is to pick a FA, bid up for a few cycles to see where the top offer is, and move on quickly if you never get there. Same thing if everytime you get top offer you get trumped the next cycle.
Yeah, that's a lot easier than my suggestion.
Maybe it's OK for folks who are nailed to their PC 24/7 and have several hours a day, every day, to do the kind of manual steps you describe. And have invest many hours over many years to figure out how to game the system. And like to game the system rather than have the system work in a fair and rational manner.
IMO, the way the process should work with your plan is -
1) Make a big offer.
2) Every 4 hours, players review offers. If yours is big (a lot more than they're asking for and a lot more than any other offer), player accepts your offer.
3) Done.
You should not be rewarded for gaming the system. No need for adjusting your offer every 4 hours. People who have jobs and lives and who haven't studied gaming the system are at less of a disadvantage.
It would take less time for a programmer to fix the FA logic so that nobody ever has to game the system like you do than it would take them to do what you describe for one FA period.
I've bid on several things in the real world. Houses. Cars. eBay crap. It all works much like I proposed. None of involves make high bids that I know can't be accepted because of a flaw in the algorithm and then dropping my bid down every 2 hours.
If you like it the way it is, I'm not going to change your mind. And WIS doesn't seem to be investing any money into the game, so all of this is just for debate. It's probably going to stay the way it is until they shut it down.